Forest ecosystem nitrogen (N) cycling is a critical controller of the ability of forests to prevent the movement of reactive N to receiving waters and the atmosphere and to sequester elevated levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO 2). Here we show that calcium (Ca) constrains the ability of northern hardwood forest trees to control the availability and loss of nitrogen. We evaluated soil N-cycling response to Ca additions in the presence and absence of plants and observed that when plants were present, Ca additions "tightened" the ecosystem N cycle, with decreases in inorganic N levels, potential net N mineralization rates, microbial biomass N content, and denitrification potential. In the absence of plants, Ca additions induced marked increases in nitrification (the key process controlling ecosystem N losses) and inorganic N levels. The observed "tightening" of the N cycle when Ca was added in the presence of plants suggests that the capacity of forests to absorb elevated levels of atmospheric N and CO 2 is fundamentally constrained by base cations, which have been depleted in many areas of the globe by acid rain and forest harvesting. © 2011 by the Ecological Society of America.
CITATION STYLE
Groffman, P. M., & Fisk, M. C. (2011). Calcium constrains plant control over forest ecosystem nitrogen cycling. Ecology, 92(11), 2035–2042. https://doi.org/10.1890/11-0461.1
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